Thursday, December 31, 2009

Create Your Own Comic Strip

I've been playing with this cool comic strip creator MAKE BELIEFS COMIX. This is a site kid would love to use to illustrate a vocabulary word or a concept. PIKI KIDS COMICS CREATOR is another tool students could use to create comics. On this site users upload pictures from their computer or online source and then create the comic around them.

If students didn't want to use photos, they could use Microsoft Clip Art. The easiest way to get clip art into another program is to open PowerPoint, choose clip art and then scroll through the images. Insert the chosen image into the slide and then right-click on it. It will allow you to "save as picture" and you can choose the destination folder.

Possible uses for the comics creators? Book reports, explain processes in math or science, "quotes" from great figures in history. Let your students come up with ideas, too.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Do You Have an LCD Projector?

If you have an LCD projector in your classroom you may want to download ZoomIt. It's a useful tool that allows you to zoom in and out on your screen and it lets you draw on the screen to provide annotations. It's a free download and quick to install.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

How the Internet Is Transforming Marketing

Thanksgiving was last week and I admit that I searched for a few recipes online. One, for sweet potatoes cooked with coconut milk and cilantro, was a real winner. I heard about it on NPR's On Point one day and looked it up. I was like a growing number of Americans. A fascinating article from the NY Times, Butterballs or Cheese Balls, an Online Barometer, describes how the major food websites tracked their traffic during the Thanksgiving countdown--and what folks were searching for.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Great Use of Kidspiration

Kidspiration can be used as a reading aid for students, particularly when they are doing research and finding only sources of information that are too difficult to read easily. Here's how to do it: Highlight a section of the text to be read aloud and copy it. Open up Kidspiration and choose picture view. Click the main idea oval, erase main idea, and paste in the copied text. Click the ear in the top toolbar and click the oval (now greatly expanded). The program will "read" the words. You may have to play around a little bit with the clicking to get it to play, but it seems to play when you've inserted the text, clicked the ear, and then clicked the oval to highlight it.